Study: Chareidi Yeshiva Dropouts Represent ‘Spiritual Epidemic” Of Epic Proportions

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JERUSALEM (VINnews) — Many Israelis have difficulty understanding why Chareidi leaders insist on opening Talmudei Torah and yeshivos despite the possibility of a spike in infections and a renewed closure. However Dr. Asaf Malchi of the Israel Democratic Institute (IDI) says in a new study that there is a “spiritual epidemic” of huge proportions in the Chareidi public and an unprecedented number of youths leaving both the yeshivas and chareidi society. Malchi told Ynet that this phenomenon had started even before the advent of COVID-19 but has gained momentum due to the lack of cohesive frameworks for youths during the virus period.

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Malchi’s research, based on 38 interviews with heads of institutions as well as interviews with heads of chareidi NGOs and associations, points out that there has been a total failure to deal with chareidi youth at-risk and a lack of a formal body which would direct all of the different services.

In the past seven months, thousands of chareidi yeshiva students have found themselves without a framework and the dropout rate, which had always existed in a minor way, has soared as a result. Malchi has unofficial data of 15% hidden dropouts, meaning that they are only partially within a framework.

Some chareidi elements have blamed the authorities. Rabbi Shimon M. a kollel head from Modi’in Illit ,is associated with the Jerusalem Faction, an extremist group organizing numerous demonstrations against any form of agreement to chareidi army enlistment. He says that “I have no doubt that the government and other elements have found the opportunity to disturb the normal regimen of the yeshivos. They simply want to cause the chareidi public to disintegrate. They know that the yeshivos are the central anchor of chareidi society and they are trying to harm this aspect. Unfortunately Aryeh Deri and others who pander to the media don’t understand this and cooperate with this trend.

Rabbi M. says that he met lots of youths on the streets in the summer and this led him to open a special framework: ‘We organized zitzes (evenings with inspirational songs and speakers) and brought food, music and speakers who can touch people’s hearts. During these evenings many youths agreed to attend ‘alternative yeshivas’ which we opened and thus we saved them from the streets.

Rabbi Shlomo B., a yeshiva ketana teacher, considers the smartphone the most dangerous foe of yeshiva students during coronavirus. “There’s no studies, kids ae bored and they realize that it would be fun to meet at a cookout. There’s always one who doesn’t belong to the yeshiva students and brings a smartphone. The first time they see it they are shocked at what it contains, the second time they are less shocked and take a few peeks and by the third time they ask for it. Watching such content drags them inexorably towards other negative influences which could eventually lead them on to the streets.

David, a chareidi registrar for yeshivos, also sees boredom as a cause of negative behaviors: “In the first week of the closure of yeshivos I came to the seaside. I met tens of students from one of the most prestigious Bnei Brak yeshivas. They were swimming and having fun on the separate beach. The second week they played with beach bats and by the third week they had professional beach bat kits. In the fourth week I was amazed to see them playing backgammon and smoking nargilas as if it was their home. They came  as sweet students and after a month they were street boys.

The rabbis however are no just concerned with smartphones and the army, but rather with the entire change in religious outlook. Rabbi Shlomo B. says: “take me, for example. I never in my life listened to the radio. When did I have time for it? Since the pandemic started I find myself listening daily to the news. This is the bad influence of coronavirus.”

Rabbi Shimon M. says that prominent rabbis encourage their students to gain a Torah profession as sofrim or mohalim. He sees this as a tragedy, since “it will reach the stage that yeshiva won’t be a default but just another framework. When you provide an alternative, you change the yeshiva from the only place for young chareidim to just another option.First they’ll study to be mohalim but then they’ll say: Why not hi-tech?Why not the army? What’s so wrong with it? This will ruin yeshivos.”

Rabbi Shlomo B. laments the fact that students diligence and ambitions to grow have been hard hit by the virus: “How can I permeate my students with love of Torah via a telephone lesson?”

Dr. Malchi describes a “huge crisis in Chareidi society” adding that until now the dropouts were mainly children of Baalei Teshuva from Sephardi background who came from “wavering societies” which were either not chareidi or “chareidi-light.” However the long closure of chareidi institutions has left more “spiritual victims of corona” in the chareidi mainstream. Rav Shlomo B. concurs: “I have a friend whose son studies in one of the prominent Jerusalem yeshivos. After Shavuos, when boys returned to capsules, he got a call from the rosh yeshiva:’Take your son, he’s finished. I can’t do anything with him.” Go figure where he was during this period.

Chareidi rosh yeshivas feel its time for mesiras nefesh (giving up one’s life). Rabbi Yisrael Landa, a Jerusalem rosh yeshiva, says that “corona is life-threatening but for a Jewish girl kidnapped by gentiles we can desecrate Shabbos to return her to religion. A situation where students are sitting at home is dangerous and one could desecrate shabbos to prevent it, it’s that dangerous.” Rabbi Shimon B. agrees: “If there won’t be yeshivos, the danger to the people of Israel will be much greater.”

Dr. Malchi believes that the state should intervene and set up an office which would provide educational responses for these youths in order to stream them into society and the workforce. He notes that the chareidi yeshiva high schools which include general studies have grown exponentially and now number over 2000 students. It is unclear however whether mainstream yeshiva heads, devastated by the loss of so many yeshiva students, will accept as a legitimate option sending such students to these high schools as the entire concept of general studies is anathema to them.

 


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21 Comments
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dovid gruenstein
dovid gruenstein
3 years ago

Seems like an inherent problem in the entire education system.

If the only way to keep kids in line is to isolate them and keep them busy, then we need to rethink our entire derech haLimud, if not more than that!

There has always been criticism that the yeshiva education system focuses on those that fit in and/or those that excel and have often essentially written off the weaker students.

This mentality has come back to bite us, as it turns out, that system only works within very narrow and unrealistic parameters that are unreasonable in this day and age.

This wake up call should challenge us all figure out what went wrong, or whether old ideas are stale and need to updated.

lazy-boy
lazy-boy
3 years ago

I know personally of many ‘drop outs’ and I know both the kids and the families.
Generally, I see it where the father or mother is too strict with the kid and forces them into situations that only bring misery. Instead of standing up for your kid, I have seen to many kids forced into miserable situations in schooling and worse inside the house.
Parents who love their kids, and treat them to all kinds of treats, tours, toys, etc and stand up and fight for the best interest of the kids, are the kids who do well. But those who do not stand with up to protect and help their kids, even worse force the kid to continue a bad environment, will see the kids drop out.
This is apparent in houses in which one parent forces his/her view over everyone.

None of this is surprising.
None of this is surprising.
3 years ago

When your community attitude is, “My way or the highway,” you’re going to have a lot of kids on the highway. More specifically:

Rabbi Shimon M. says that prominent rabbis encourage their students to gain a Torah profession as sofrim or mohalim. He sees this as a tragedy…

To be a mohel or sofer is a “tragedy”? Who should be your son’s mohel, the wig woman in India?

It’s not the yeshiva that’s broken. It’s the Jews who don’t know how to use a yeshiva properly.

HeshyB
HeshyB
3 years ago

Medieval era is over. Charedi youth ate totally bored in yeshiva and with total conformity that’s demanded. ‘Learning’ all day is not a great option when the world is blowing up. Jews for centuries have been running from the medieval model and searching for more spiritual nurturing paths. This is not nu…

Ina
Ina
3 years ago

We didn’t have these problems thirty plus years ago when all children were accepted into our schools. Todays mechanchim have created this problem that began way before Covid-19 with the blessings of our rabbonim who are missing in action. Perhaps this is why so many of them have been victims of Covid-19…. Our Torah is greater than any high tech device that our youth have in their hands. Time for our “wonderful and capable mechanchim” to figure out how to hold onto our children — the very future of klal Yisrael. This problem will only continue to sprial out of control.

green4
green4
3 years ago

it will reach the stage that yeshiva won’t be a default but just another framework. When you provide an alternative, you change the yeshiva from the only place for young chareidim to just another option.First they’ll study to be mohalim but then they’ll say: Why not hi-tech?Why not the army? What’s so wrong with it? This will ruin yeshivos.” Chas V’Shalom! Oh My Goodness! Actually studying high tech or another worthy profession and really earning a living to support your family rather than living off taxpayer and government’s teat…. oh I forgot. Torah U’Maddah is frowned upon because if some Yeshivot close the Rabbis who teach there will be out of jobs and might also have to find actual work in the public sector. Tragedy.

Peace now
Peace now
3 years ago

There is no protocol for kids that don’t perfectly fit the ultra orthodox narrative. If a kid follows the path perfectly they will be okay but if they slightly deviate then are labeled a troubled outcast are are quickly written off as hopeless.
This lack of balance and consideration for all types of kids is sadly what’s pushing them away and putting them at risk for trouble.

PaulinSaudi
PaulinSaudi
3 years ago

Would you expect Chareidi, Hindu, Catholic or any other religious group’s leaders to say things are just going great in this difficult time?

E Archy
E Archy
3 years ago

I don’t dispute any if the below issues as that may be issues as well.

The key issue and discussion here is, that when kids are left unstructured even good kids who excel in school, it poses a great danger. Obviously spiritually is a huge piece. But there is also a physical danger, whether its kids doing dangerous stuff, kids being molested (true story) etc.. When you combine the borader picture together, it becomes clear that governments do not get our society or our needs. What works well or manageble for a secular famlly of 2 doesn’t work well for a frum family of 6. And while its true that we need to do a better job teaching kids how to be a frum torah jew outside the school, leaving children unstrucred for months is just an impossible job for schools to instill on children how to remain sane and torahdik. Kids by their DNA need structure and you can’t alter DNA. I am sure it will come out that its bad for secular kids too but its exponentially bad for us frum kids. School closures are always a danger for us spiritually and mentally. This is why we need to resist school closures. Its pikkuych nefesh for my kids.

Kibechabatachnu
Kibechabatachnu
3 years ago

This Is a challenge for them. Let these potential drop outs hold strong against the yeitzer hara and soon greet moshiach. We need your success CHAZAK CHAZAK VENISCHAZEIK

gil
gil
3 years ago

gershon edelshtein, aryeh deri and hos little monkey arbel are evil torah haters